Archive for the ‘Mil Muertes’ Category

If you’re tired of seeing the same old thing every Monday Night on Raw, you really don’t have anybody to blame for it but yourself. From 2001-2005 there were no other alternatives to WWE programming. Then TNA came along and there was an alternative, although it was crap. TNA tried too hard to beat WWE at being the WWE and as a result failed miserably to provide quality entertainment. They provided excellent wrestling at times, but we all know that there is more to a wrestling show than the wrestling and what TNA tried to do to fill that part of the show was some of the most god awful crap ever to make it on the air. But now there are alternatives. And don’t get me wrong, I still love WWE programming. I still watch Raw and Smackdown every week. But WWE in some respects is a victim of their own success. In trying to satisfy the demand created by putting their competition out of business, WWE has steadily increased the amount of weekly programming they create, thus creating a much more watered down product. It’s still fun. It still has it’s high points every week. But 5 hours of Raw and Smackdown every week makes for a lot of down time and failed entertainment experiments. Plus, WWE has become more about using Raw and Smackdown to promote the WWE Network, the WWE App, the WWE iPhone games, etc., etc. and less about providing a show. In 3 hours of Raw, it feels like roughly half the show is spent plugging products or other WWE branded shows.

Lucha Underground, however, only provides one hour of programming per week, and it is always stellar. The storytelling is compelling rather than a rehash of reality tv episodes. The promotional segments are always focused around the wrestling and what you are going to see in the ring either that week or the next. There is no prolonged two or three months of promotion for one match before you finally see the guys fight that you want to see fight. The wrestling is top notch. It can become a bit of a spotfest at times with all of the high flying that is going on, but it’s always well connected and not just something that the performers do to try to keep the crowd interested. If you watch the crowd during the show, they are always on the edge of their seats. And whereas the WWE fans will frequently try to hijack Raw and Smackdown with sophomoric though sometimes amusing chants, the Lucha Underground audience is a part of the show without distracting from the performance with a different chant every two minutes. This is from beginning to finish a well put together wrestling show with a great and varied cast of characters, a dastardly authority figure who doesn’t make himself the center of attention every week and announcers who genuinely love the product and hang on every second of action in the ring. And that’s without delving past the surface of the in-ring product at Lucha Underground yet.

If you were a fan of wrestling in the attitude era, Lucha Underground gives you the brutality and violence that has been missing from the WWE product for the past decade. If you can’t or don’t want to go back and watch every episode of Lucha Underground from start to finish (which I highly recommend), then at least check out a sampling from among some of the better matches that they have put on the air so far. Watch Mil Muertes vs. Fenix in a Casket Match. Watch the Best of 5 series between Drago and Aero Star. Watch the Trios Championship tournament matches. Watch the Aztec Warfare Battle Royal. You can find most of those matches on YouTube or full episodes on dailymotion or various other video streaming sites. And I’m not in any way advocating that you replace the WWE with Lucha Underground. I am advocating that you broaden your horizons and that you supplement the entertainment that you are getting from WWE every week by also watching Lucha Underground. WWE has made it clear over the past decade that they are going to follow a certain business model and more power to them. Regardless of whatever criticism they receive from their vocal detractors, what they are doing works. You can’t refute that. They are the global leader in the industry and they just keep growing and expanding with each passing year. So, enjoy WWE for what it is and stop trying to pressure them into being something that they aren’t any more. By watching both WWE and Lucha Underground, you get the best of both worlds. You get the entertainment brand that WWE has become and you also get to witness a young thriving promotion that’s filling the void left by the WWE outgrowing what they used to be.